spongebob007
Military
- Sep 14, 2007
- 265
I have always included the power dissipated by the fans in thermal calculations and CFD models of electronics enclosures. Recently I had a customer ask me to justify why I assumed that the fans dissipate 100% of the input power as heat in the CFD model I did of their system. So I sat down and did some math. I calculated the fan efficiency and determined that the actual power dissipated by the fan at the predicted operating point was only around 42% of the input power. Next I calculated the air temperature rise through the fan using delta_T=Q/m_dotCp. Regardless of whether I take the fan efficiency into account or not, in each case the predicted temperature rise across the fans is less than 1C. From this the conclusion that I came to is that taking the extra time to include the fan power dissipation has a negligible effect on the overall accuracy of the analysis. Basically the fans don't heat the air up before it enters the electronics enough to be concerned about. Even if the case were such that the fan heat causes a temperature rise on the order of 4 to 5 degrees C, our company design policy is to have 20% margin on allowable temperatures, so that any error would be likely swallowed up by the margin anyway.
So do others doing this type of work exclude fan heat from the analysis? Ha sanyone ever run into a situation where neglecting the heat introduced by the fans has resulted in significant errors?
So do others doing this type of work exclude fan heat from the analysis? Ha sanyone ever run into a situation where neglecting the heat introduced by the fans has resulted in significant errors?